Over 1,200 Rohingya children under 5 killed in the first month of Burma Army push

The aid organization Doctors Without Borders (Medecins Sans Frontieres) has reported the deaths of 11,393 Rohingya people in the first 31 days of fighting against the ethnic minority; 1,713 were children under the age of five. “Of these, 8,170 deaths were due to violence … including 1,247 children under five years of age.” The survey admits for a range of possibilities due to the nature of surveys, but any way you look at it, the numbers are staggeringly high.

Anyone who has lived and worked in a rural war zones know that, after the initial violent surges subside and the years start to go by, it is not usually the violence that kills most people, it’s that the war cuts off all access to basic needs, healthcare and otherwise. What might be a simple trip to the doctor in the U.S. could easily kill a person in Rakhine State now — diarrhea, for example, is a major killer. That is not to dismiss the violent deaths by any means, and the numbers reported by Doctors Without Borders is significant.

503,698 Rohingya refugees were interviewed in addition to another 104,410 who were already in Bangladesh, which is a significant majority of the Rohingya population that has fled from Burma. There are approximately 626,000 refugees in Bangladesh that have recently come across the border.

This is the section of the Doctors Without Borders report describing the percentages of Rohingya deaths following the attacks by the Burmese military:

Total Population

Children Under 5

Violence (% of all deaths)

71.7 %

72.8 %

Type of violent death

Beaten

5.0 %

6.9 %

Following sexual violence

2.6 %

0.0 %

Shot

69.4 %

59.10%

Burned at home

8.8 %

14.8 %

Landmine

1.0 %

2.3 %

Detained/kidnapped

0.3 %

0.0 %

Throat cut

0.2 %

0.0 %

Unknown

0.4 %

2.3 %

Other

12.31 %

14.8 %

To reiterate: that means that 14.8% of all children under the age of five that died violently during this period, died because they were burned alive. Of all the children under the age of five that died at all, 72.8% of deaths were violent ones.

A Rohingya man holds the body of a two-day-old baby before his burial in the cemetery of Kutupalong refugee camp, Bangladesh. For generations, Rohingya Muslims have called Myanmar home. Now, in what appears to be a systematic purge, they are, quite literally, being wiped off the map. (AP Photo/Bernat Armangue, File)

When I went to a refugee camp on the border of Thailand and Burma, I came across and orphanage — one of many. This was a refugee camp for the Karen, years before the current conflict against the Rohingya and on the opposite side of the country. They are generally Christian, animist or Buddhist there, not Muslim, a distinction that often needs to be made when people believe the narrative coming out of the state-run Burmese media about Islamic extremists.

I met a boy there and the Burmese military had attacked his village and started killing civilians, though he did not describe their methods to me. He was with his uncle at the time, and the uncle grabbed him and they hid under a raised house — his house. His parents were shot and killed right above him. The Burmese Army made camp there and the two of them hid under that house for days, not making a sound.

Eventually they left, and the pair started to walk toward where the uncle knew the refugee camps were. Eventually he fell sick, and knew he wasn’t going to make it. He pointed down a path and told the boy to walk down it until he came to a village, and they would take him to the camps. The uncle died and the boy did as he was told. He walked for two days by himself before reaching the village. When I met him, he could have been no older than 14 or 15 — most likely he was younger when the event happened.

His was just one such story that I encountered that day at the orphanage. This is the same type of violence being committed against the Rohingya, by the same government with the same tactics — overwhelming amounts and documented reports of rape, murder and destruction of property.

About the Author

About Luke Ryan

Luke Ryan is a SOFREP journalist in Tampa, FL. He is a former Team Leader from 3rd Ranger Battalion, having served four deployments to Afghanistan. He grew up overseas, the son of foreign aid workers, and lived in Pakistan for nine years and Thailand for five.
He has a degree in English Literature and loves to write on his own as well, working on several personal projects.

BECAUSE, FACTS DON'T TAKE SIDES

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Here's a sample of the comments on this post.

John B

https://bdnews24.com/bangladesh/2017/12/19/bangladesh-and-myanmar-form-joint-panel-to-repatriate-rohingyas
Let's hope the repatriating of the Rohingya's is swiftly and efficiently implemented.
John

Susan B

Though there are many groups that are helping the refuges in Bangladesh, such as Samaritan's Purse, UNICEF, Save the Children, ION of the UN, and more, it is not getting the problem at its root...the Myanmar government. It seems that M S M does not find a market for this type of news.
Where are all the professed "bleeding hearts" that are supposed to care about situations such as these? I guess they are too busy worrying about the mother's of unwanted children not being able to get abortions, or some adult females that endured sexual harrassment at her job, or even...God forbid...a cross or other Christian image or message that will totally hurt and corrupt the mind of some poor innocent in school, or college, or public place that may have to see it.
Where is our government on this issue? Why isn't Ambassador Haley beating this drum? We finally have a Religious Freedom Ambassador in Sam Brownback. Isn't his role to go to countries that are causing issue with religious minorities in their country? It's not just for Christian minority issues.
As someone else mentioned in the comments...we spend so much money to aid people that turn around and screw over us and yet it doesn't give aid to people like these that truly need it. We should be looking at whatever aid or assistance we are giving Myanmar and put hawsers on it until they change their animus to the Rohingya and other minority people. The same could be said for the poor citizens of Yemen that are caught up in the national (or international) struggle for religious control.

minou

As a mother, it's the babies that hurt me the most. And, naturally, it's the babies who are the most vulnerable in this kind of situation. Little ones are so fragile. Oh Luke, I wish I could change things.

Joy B

It’s not just lack of reporting. Can you imagine the help that could be funded if we had some of the millions that have been sent to our enemies in “aid” and “payments”? It could also be that the sanctions on Burmese exports like rubies need to be put back in place

Joni S

This is truly heartbreaking. The only good thing of those statistics I read was that zero percent were killed following a sexual attack.The other types of deaths are unspeakable enough. The deaths of these children should be in the news, but yet I have not heard one peep about the strife of the Rohingya people. Thank you Luke for bringing us these stories of the Karen and the Rohingya. Seems both are a forgotten people facing genocide. I can't imagine the horrors that the Rohingya people have faced. The pictures you have posted speak volumes of the pain and hardship and torture they have endured. It seems if only a miracle would prevent them from eventual extinction.

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